The Parents' Review

A Monthly Magazine of Home-Training and Culture

Edited by Charlotte Mason.

"Education is an atmosphere, a discipline, a life."
______________________________________

Love Songs (*)

by Mrs. Douglas WilsonVolume 14, 1903, pgs. 456-459

The love story and the love song will ever remain favourites with old
and young; and the most ancient, yet the freshest and sweetest, are
those the birds would tell us in spring-time, in wood and lane and
hedgerow. To be landed into the thick of the very haunts of the
nightingale with half an hour's train ride from Baker Street, seems
almost a fairy story; nevertheless, within that short space of time, we
found ourselves early last June wandering in bird fairy-land, the air
full of tuneful melody.

For some hours we walked leisurely through lanes and hedgerows, fresh
with spring flowers and bursting buds. The air was so full of song
tangle, that at first it seemed almost impossible to disengage one
warble from another, until a clear, shrill, penetrating note cleaving
the air and dwarfing all other sounds, discovered to us that the
nightingale was near. Many people imagine that the nightingale sings
only at night, but it is a well-known fact that his singing continues
from sunrise till long after sunset, although it is in the gloaming
when the bird world is silent, that his song can be best heard and
appreciated. Twice, the clear, resonant, long drawn note was repeated
and then followed a continuous stream of luscious sounds, tumbling pell
mell the one over the other, in a very cascade of ecstasy.

The singer sat well in a view at the extreme end of an oak branch, the
sun raining down and burnishing his ruddy back with gold. As though
aware that he was being watched and admired, he sang stanza with
endless variations beginning every fresh burst of song with the two
clear long-drawn notes as preludes. In appearance, the nightingale is
somewhat like a small, slim thrush, but his back and tail are a reddish
brown, his breast a greyish white. While he was singing, all other bird
music seemed to cease, but during a longer pause than usual between the
two bursts of song, it was evident that the other birds were all tuning
away on their own account, thoroughly indifferent to any but their own
joys.

From a leafy bower came the two quaint notes of the chiff-chaff. The
bird was safely hidden from view by his lattice of green, behind which
he continued his "chiff-chaff, chiff-chaff," as though pleased with
himself and all the world. Did the nightingale resent this transference
for a moment of our attention, or was he anxious to see how home
affairs were progressing? All suddenly, he ceased singing in the middle
of a verse and flew down into a bramble thicket by the hedgerow, a very
characteristic spot for the nest of the nightingale.

During the afternoon, many nightingale were heard by us, but he was the
only one who allowed himself to be seen, either at rest or on the wing.

Now that the king's voice was silent, we became conscious of a singer
almost as beautiful as the nightingale. The notes were longer
sustained, but they bubbled forth with a dainty delicacy and a
richness, that can be imagined only by one who had heard the blackcap.
Seeing a trespasser, the bird gave out a harsh rasping note of warning
to his mate, who sat on her nest close by.

Bird songs and nesting have almost the same meaning, and while our ears
were all alert to listen, our eyes were on the watch to spy out the
nests, which prompted such joyous carollings.

The blackcap's nest, a small cup-shaped building of grass and moss, was
built high up in the bosom of the hedge, and on the nest sat Mrs.
Blackcap, anxiously watching our every movement. Sometimes the male
bird takes his turn in sitting on the nest, and it is said that he
often sings in this position. The mother bird can be distinguished from
her lord, by her cap of ruddy brown, in contrast to the shiny black
poll, from which her husband receives the name of blackcap. As soon as
we had moved to a safe distance, the male bird, feeling danger past,
burst forth in a new love carol of joy.

Our quest was a double one; to find as many nests as we could, and to
distinguish and contrast the love ditties of the birds now in full
song. Nests were everywhere, in the most likely and unlikely places,
and the very simplicity of their positions safeguarded them. The hedges
were sparingly draped just then, but a few days of sunshine and warmth,
and the dress of green would be so complete, as to hide even those in
the most exposed situation.

Suspended in a hawthorn spray hung a nest of the pretty little
white-throat. The glitter of two bead-like eyes drew our attention, but
although we were so close to her, the mother did not seem at all
disturbed by our presence. Her apparent trustfulness made us feel
almost ashamed of our pertinent prying, so we beat a hasty retreat and
left her to her home joys and matronly cares. It is an open question
whether the song of the thrush or the blackbird is the most beautiful.
But every thrush seems to have a different note from his brother, and
yet in every thrush song we could not help noticing how many of the
notes were imitative of the nightingale. Do the young thrushes copy our
great singer, when they first begin to warble? We nearly trod on some
young thrushes, which had but a few hours previously left their nest
and were hopping about among the grass and bramble sprays beneath.

The empty nursery was full of feather dust, a sure sign that the birds
had been fully fledged before leaving. Behind a withered spray of last
years' bramble leaves, a bullfinch has skillfully poised its nest, and
here again the sitting mother took little heed of our presence. The
nest of the bullfinch might be that of a miniature wood-pigeon. So
loosely is it knit together, that in spite of the lining of roots, the
eggs can be seen clearly through the slight structure. All the time a
mother bullfinch is sitting, she keeps turning the eggs with her feet,
just as a wood-pigeon does. One home we found quite deserted, drowned
by the recent rains. It was the nest of the hedge sparrow, and
contained one pretty blue egg. The builders had flitted, let us hope
for safer quarters.

What ventriloquist the cuckoo is! At one moment his voice seemed close
to our ear, at another, far away in the distance, and we were not a
little surprised to discover the bird resting on a paling not far off,
his tail dipping and rising each time he piped forth his two notes.

In the bosom of a fir tree, the wood-pigeon crooned softly to his wife,
"Don't scold so, Sukey, don't"; and in contrast to his melancholy, a
frisky, pert little robin piped forth in shrill trebles for sheer
gladness that the sun was warm and bright, and that summer was near. We
searched in all the likely spots for a robin's nest, but the rascal was
too clever for us this time, though during our quest we discovered the
nest of a reed warbler by the hedgeside. It was a perfect work of art,
raised from the ground on some reeds, and built of dry grass,
strengthened by rootlets. Tall sentinels of the wild hyacinth, with the
blue bells just expanded, guarded the nest in front and rear. We did
not get a sight of the builders of this beautiful home, which we
carefully looked at without touching, lest we should desecrate its
sanctity and perhaps cause the birds to forsake it.

Poets and singers have their great periods when their flight of song is
at its highest, and with the woodland songsters, that point is reached
and sustained, while the children are helpless and under the parents'
wing.

Later, when the young birds mature and leave the nest, the song of the
parent dies away in sad and broken chords, especially noticeable in the
lay of our greatest singer, the nightingale. But on that bright June
afternoon, there was no sweet melancholy, but only the joyousness of
love and sweetness of life, that even on murky November days the echo
of the old love songs we heard cleaves the air around and takes us back
in memory to those "Temples not made with hands."